Thomas Edison's lightbulb was a very innovative invention. ;p
(1)A innovative use of technology is using GPS to locate a missing car or other property. (2)The coach's innovative plays attracted the attention of professional football teams.
"Innovative" (new, trend-setting) is "INN-oh-vay-tiv".
It is fairly simple to use the word in a sentence... you could just say (using it as an adjective) "He was a heteroclite person." For the noun form, you could say "He was a heteroclite." The trick is if you have to use it in a sentence in a way that hints at its meaning... that is trickier. Maybe something like "He was an innovative, eclectic heteroclite; normalcy was a bad word to him." Here's a link to a dictionary page, for further review: http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/heteroclite
Synonyms include imaginative and innovative.
Imaginative, Inventive, Inspired, or Innovative.
the innovative place was huge
However, you could say that TUI is innovative.
Thomas Jefferson was very innovative, as he always came up with new inventions.
Its time to innvoate the conputer to my sister
it depends on the other sentences you used
A innovative use of technology is using GPS to locate a missing car or other property.
The new product features innovative technology that is designed to improve efficiency and streamline workflows for businesses.
(1)A innovative use of technology is using GPS to locate a missing car or other property. (2)The coach's innovative plays attracted the attention of professional football teams.
"The cinematographer used innovative techniques to capture the essence of the story."
The teacher's innovative pedagogy encouraged student engagement and critical thinking in the classroom.
The author wrote a very descriptive and interesting novel. Or: It was so innovative and unique, it was truly a novel idea.
Innovative is an adjective.